TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

The Nashville-based law firm of Stranch, Jennings & Garvey has opened a new office in Oakland, California, to be run by Lesley Weaver, a new member of the firm and a nationally recognized litigator. Weaver also is bringing a team of eight additional attorneys with her. “Lesley is a force whose record of changing bad industry practices through litigation speaks for itself,” said J. Gerard Stranch IV, founding and managing member of the firm. “She has consistently gone toe-to-toe with the world’s largest multinational corporations and secured landmark results. Her arrival isn’t just an expansion; it’s a transformation of our firm’s national reach.” Stranch, Jennings & Garvey already has offices outside of Tennessee in St. Louis and Las Vegas. Read more about the news on the firm’s website or in this press release.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

A nearly 100-year-old federal ban on mailing concealable firearms through the U.S. Postal Service infringes on the Second Amendment and cannot be enforced, according to an opinion released Thursday by the Department of Justice (DOJ). The move comes after the gun rights organization Gun Owners of America filed suit against the 1927 law. The postal service ban currently applies to pistols, revolvers and other firearms capable of being concealed on a person — including short-barreled shotguns and rifles. Rifles and shotguns, however, may be mailed between licensed dealers, manufacturers and importers. Non-mailable firearms found in the mail stream currently are “immediately reported to the United States Postal Inspection Service” and then referred to the relevant U.S. attorney’s office for prosecution. The Hill has more on the story.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris held a press conference earlier this week to highlight concerns at the county jail, known as 201 Poplar. The Commercial Appeal reports that he also used the event to call on Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner to "come up with a plan for reform in 2026.” According to Harris, Bonner has not provided a thorough plan for reform for the jail. Harris also called out the number of deaths at the jail, saying the issue is that of management and oversight and that there is a "lack of basic humanity in our jail." Ahead of the press conference, Bonner sent a press release to media outlets saying Harris has routinely underfunded the sheriff's office and refused to engage with Bonner about the need for a new jail.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 16, 2026

The state of Florida has become the second U.S. state to reduce its reliance on the American Bar Association (ABA) to determine graduates of which law school can become lawyers, Reuters reports. The Supreme Court of Florida said in an order released Jan. 15 that it was replacing the ABA as the “sole accrediting agency” for law schools whose graduates may take the state’s bar exam, a requirement to practice in the state. The Supreme Court of Texas finalized a similar plan earlier this month. The Tennessee Supreme Court is similarly examining whether to "modify, reduce or eliminate its reliance on ABA accreditation" and whether any other practicable alternatives should be considered. Feedback on those questions may be sent to TBA's newly formed Legal Access & Regulatory Reform Task Force at townhall@tnbar.org as well as directly to the court. Visit TBA's Legal Access & Regulatory Reform resource page for more information.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News, Upcoming

The TBA will be closed Monday in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The office will reopen Tuesday at 8 a.m. CST. Visit the TBA.org website for information on CLE or other TBA programs and for staff contact information.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 15, 2026
News Type: Legal News

A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit filed by the family of Anthony Thompson Jr., who was killed by a Knoxville police officer in 2021. According to Knox News, Thompson was 17 years old when he was shot and killed by an officer inside an Austin-East Magnet High School bathroom. The lawsuit by his family centered on the claim that officers failed to provide sufficient medical care to the dying teenager. Other claims previously were thrown out by the courts. The settlement ends a lengthy court battle weeks before a scheduled federal trial but still must be approved by a judge.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 15, 2026
News Type: Legal News

New data from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is raising questions about how DUI arrests are handled across the state after hundreds of drivers arrested for driving under the influence later tested with no alcohol or drugs in their systems. News Channel 5 reports that out of nearly 17,000 blood samples taken in 2024, 419 cases — about 2.5% — came back with zero alcohol or other intoxicants detected. Criminal defense attorney Ben Raybin tells the news channel that a woman he is representing is not “an isolated phenomenon.” We are “seeing hundreds throughout the state.” Compounding the situation is that by the time toxicology results are returned, the consequences of an arrest can already be severe. Raybin says changes are needed in how DUI investigations are conducted in the field.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 15, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Knox County Commissioner Larsen Jay has proposed overhauling the structure of the troubled Richard L. Bean Juvenile Detention Center to change its mission and who oversees it. According to Knox News, the proposal would turn the center into a judicial model designed to make teens successful contributors to their communities instead of focusing on incarceration and punishment. The detention center would be overseen by Knox County's juvenile court judge, ending any plans to put it under the sheriff's office. Jay unveiled the plan at a Knox County Juvenile Service Center Board of Directors meeting this week. The paper reports that the board voted unanimously to send the proposal to the Knox County Commission. The proposal is supported by Juvenile Court Judge Tim Irwin and by Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 15, 2026
News Type: Legal News

A U.S. judiciary committee recently held a hearing on what would be the first-ever rule regulating AI evidence at trial. According to Reuters, the U.S. Judicial Conference's Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules heard public comment on the proposed rule, which received a "lukewarm reception" from those who testified. Corporate lawyers and class-action attorneys called it a well-intended but premature attempt to address an evolving technology. Under the proposal, AI and other machine-generated evidence offered at trial without an accompanying expert witness would be subjected to the same reliability standards as expert witnesses, who are governed by Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 15, 2026

A 24-year old Springfield man is expected to plead guilty Friday to charges related to hacking the U.S. Supreme Court’s electronic filing system, WSMV reports. In a motion filed Tuesday, Nicholas Moore stated he wishes to change his plea. Moore was charged in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia with one count of fraud under allegations that he repeatedly accessed the court’s protected computer systems without authorization during 2023.


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